On Thanksgiving Day I caught a holiday special on NPR. The
hour long show featured stories of Americans especially grateful for music. Each story had one or more narrator with
samplings of the music that inspired them. The stories and the music touched me, and I remembered the
words of the philosopher Nietzsche (himself a musician) who said: “Without
music, life would be a mistake.”
Most of the NPR stories revolved around love and death. There
were stories about music leading to romantic encounters that led to happy, enduring
love. Other stories told how music
can heal deep wounds that life inflicts on us. In one sad tale, a woman describes how she lost her true
love in a cruel, untimely fashion; yet, in the end, their shared love of music
saved her from despair, and in her ongoing love of music has come to feel she’s gone beyond the pains of
her loss. She lives, she seemed to
say, in a mental atmosphere beyond anything that death could do to her—thanks to
the subtle effect of music on her consciousness.
Plato was another philosopher that saw music as important in
the education of the soul. He was aware of the different effects of different
kinds of music on our minds and bodies: from modes that play on the cruder emotions
of the self to those that appeal to the higher modes of consciousness.
Music was a staple in the Renaissance philosophy of Marsilio
Ficino, a key part of his theory of soul-making—music has powerful effects on
the soul because it operates through the air that is kin to the spirit. In Nietzsche’s first book, The Birth of Tragedy Out of the Spirit of
Music (1872), we find the ecstatic
music of the cult of Dionysos pitted against the corrosive Socratic dialectic. Nietzsche perceived the dangers of rampant rationalism that could
paralyze and stifle the creative potentials of the human animal. Music is central to native American
culture, as you can see from Ruth Murray Underhill’s book, The Song Magic of the Papago Indians.
So music is powerful stuff. I agree with Nietzsche on the need to preserve the
all-important ecstatic state from the clutches of reductionist fanatics.
Nietzsche and F. W. H. Myers agree on the key role of ecstasy in the production
of so much high-order creativity, e.g., Blake’s prophetic works, the music of Hildegard
von Bingen, and the levitations of Joseph of Copertino.
Intuitively, it should be clear why ecstasy increases the
chances of extraordinary mental and physical breakthroughs. It opens and clears our mental space; it
unlocks a gate, clears the path, brushes away the obstacles to free movement. In the ecstatic state, all the filters,
screens, and veils are blown away. The psyche enters a state of pure energy,
and is minimally disposed to repress or to feint away from any possible influx.
The records of human experience are clear: throughout history, people have used
different forms of music to open their hearts and minds to a larger life.
Sometimes it happens in a big way, as in a near-death experience,
or maybe after being bed-ridden (like Matisse who discovered he was an artist). Some people pray, some meditate, some
use psychedelics. Perfectly “normal”
people are sometimes opened up by physical accidents, often in ways totally
unpredictable and freakishly coincidental.
The point I want to emphasize: Music is a common way that
people may catch glimpses of something transcendent. I love all kinds of music.
I also know that a few times in my life the music I was listening to
temporarily lifted me out of my normal self so that I sensed I was immortal and
felt at that instant that I was perfectly happy to die. When I recounted this
to my friend, Laura Dale, former editor of the Journal of the American Society
for Psychical Research, she replied, “Nothing makes me believe in life after death more than
listening to Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis.
I’ll bet there are many readers
with interesting stories to tell about the powerful way music has affected—even
changed—their lives.
And by the way, I’m sure it can happen with almost any kind
of music. It all depends on how
much soul you bring to the listening.
3 comments:
Music does indeed nourish the soul. Nietzsche may well be right in his obsevation; I would add that the very best music not just the product of a creative human imagination but is divinely inspired.
Do you know of Rachel Flowers?
https://theylaughedatnoah.blogspot.com/2018/11/friday-music-rachel-flowers-by-jd.html
And I offer this quote from John Carey -
"To create is to stretch one's hand into a realm beyond sequence, beyond time, beyond death - beyond even the meaning of these words - and to share in the magic of the gods. Exiled from Eden, we are the builders of Eden, carving the everlasting forms of which we are the shadows." - John Carey; associate professor at the Department of Celtic Languages and Literature, Harvard University.
That quote and my Celtic blood prompted me to do this musical post also-
https://theylaughedatnoah.blogspot.com/2017/02/friday-night-is-music-night-celtic.html
All of it sounding divinely inspired with Blake and Yeats as additional sources who were themselves equally inspired. The missing video was Van Morrison's 'In The Garden' which includes the line -"No Guru, no method, no teacher/ Just you and I and nature/And the Father in the garden."
slainte
John Douglas
This post made me think of a scene toward the end of the film 'Philadelphia' in which Tom Hanks has an ostensible transcendental experience while listening to an opera piece. If you have seen the film, surely you will remember it. Check it out:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DwRHwKZSu-w
Real clean website, appreciate it for this post.
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